February 1 marks the first day of Black History Month, when black culture gets a celebratory spotlight for 28 days... unless you’re like me and celebrate black brilliance every day. At the New York Times, a collection of previously unpublished shots of black stars, and their stories, are up for viewing.

Each of the photos, like one of famous actress and singer Lena Horne in a luxurious fur coat perched in her Manhattan penthouse apartment, comes with a story. Horne, for instance, was able to secure prime real estate in New York City at a time when building managers refused black tenants, thanks to the activism of fellow actor, singer and race man Harry Belafonte. Despite selling over a million records, Belafonte couldn’t find a white landlord to rent him an apartment. So he sent his white publicist to 300 West End Avenue, where he rented a four-bedroom space but Belafonte signed the lease. Upon learning Belafonte was the real tenant, the white landlord demanded he leave. Belafonte, of course, refused. Instead the activist bought the building through cloaked companies like a boss and rented space out to friends like Horne, who stayed in the penthouse with her white husband Lennie Hayton, which no doubt caused housing discrimination problems, too. FromThe New York Times:

“Lennie and I lived in hotels for years while we were on the road,” said Ms. Horne, who was 47 then. “And then we went through the hysteria of trying to find an apartment – all those stupid problems – and when we finally found a place that would admit both me and Lennie, we put our roots down.”

Other images include Martin Luther King Jr., the charred inside of Malcolm X’s Queens home after it was fire bombed days before he was assassinated, nerdy high school photos of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar when his name was still Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr., children racially integrating schools in Princeton, New Jersey, early Run-DMC concert shots, and more.